During his address to the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC), Vice President Pence called America a nation of faith." and claimed that the phrase was a favorite of President Trumps, and "we are in the midst of a new beginning of greatness in America.

The new SBC President, J. D. Greear, felt the need to tweet his ambivalence about Pences speech, and perhaps Pences very presence at the Convention.

In his own speech to the Convention, Greear emphasized the subordinate place of earthly politics. Baptists renounce Messianic politics and Messianic politicians, because:

We believe that Jesus is the lord of the whole earth... that salvation is found in him, not in the Republican platform or the Democratic platform, and that salvation did not come riding in on the wings of Air Force One. It came cradled in a manger.

Theologically, its best to split the difference.

No nation will ever become the kingdom of God; no people will ever replace the Church as the people of God. Yet the gospel announces Jesuss kingship over everything. The Church proclaims the gospel so that the world will acknowledge Jesus. We hope for an America that honors the Church, an America whose manners express the golden rule and the second great commandment, whose laws respect Gods law by protecting the vulnerable, whose arts and entertainments glorify rather than degrade human beings, whose children learn that Scripture and prayer are essential to education. We hope for an America conformed to the reality that Jesus is Lord.

A Church isnt proclaiming the full biblical gospel unless it calls kings and nations to acknowledge and serve the king of kings. To abandon hope that Americaand every other nationmight become Christian is to abandon the gospel.

Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.